US kills more than 100 in attack on pro-Assad regime forces in Syria after ‘unprovoked attack’ on allies

The US led an attack that killed more than 100 pro-Assad regime soldiers in Syria on Thursday.

The attack was a response to a pro-Assad airstrike on the headquarters of a long-time US ally in Syria.

The US has been edging closer and closer to fighting the Syrian government and Russia since the fall of ISIS.

A US attack on forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad killed more than 100 in the country’s north on Thursday, and the regime came roaring back with airstrikes of its own on rebel forces near Damascus.

The airstrikes from Assad killed 21 and injured 125, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported on Thursday.

“We suspect Syrian pro-regime forces were attempting to seize terrain SDF had liberated from Daesh in September 2017,” a US military official told Reuters.

The pro-Assad forces were “likely seeking to seize oilfields in Khusham that had been a major source of revenue for [ISIS] from 2014 to 2017.”

But Syrian state media characterized the event differently, saying the US had bombed “popular local forces fighting” ISIS, and that it was a US “attempt to support terrorism.” The Assad regime and its Russian backers have an established history of calling anyone who doesn’t support the regime a terrorist.

Though some of the anti-Assad resistance has become entwined with Islamist groups like Al Qaeda, the US vets the groups it works with, and maintains that the SDF are moderate rebels who were instrumental in the defeat of ISIS.

Syria wants the US out, but it won’t go without a fight

source

Reuters

Syria’s air offensive on rebel-held areas near Damascus has been going on for days, with local reports claiming that airstrikes from the Syrian government and Russia killed scores of civilians.

Activists and first responders said that at least 55 people were killed after the airstrikes on Tuesday.

Though Russia announced its forces would withdraw from Syria in December, the recent rash of renewed strikes show they have stayed put, and are likely responding to an increased need to support the Assad regime.

In January, Syria vowed that it would eject US troops from the country, but since then the US announced plans to stay there long enough to counter Iran’s growing influence.

Meanwhile, the US began a more vocal campaign of accusing Syria and Russia of using chemical weapons in the conflict.